I nodded and glanced into the room behind me. “I’ve heard some wonderful things about it. In fact, I decided to stop in because several friends have mentioned your place, and my friends at the B & B across the street couldn’t stop raving. The coffee set they bought from you is exquisite.”
Ginger beamed. “Isn’t it? I was really proud of that find.” She shifted the cat and cast a pleased glance around her. “Are you looking for anything in particular? I’d be happy to point you in the right direction.”
“Actually, I’m just here to take a look around. I’m killing time until another appointment.”
“Well, feel free to look around all you want, and give me a shout if I can help you find anything.” She deposited the cat on the top of the bureau, disturbing a layer of dust, and wiped the hair from her hands onto her pant legs.
I battled a sneeze and felt a strong urge to escape the cramped store and grab a lung full of fresh air. But I’d told Ginger I was there to browse, so I felt obligated to at least give it a quick look. I wandered idly through one room after another, slipping past mounds of crockery, headboards, dressers, silver teapots, and an occasional vanity, sidling past stacks of mismatched dinnerware, coat trees, mirrors, and picture frames.
On sheer volume alone, her inventory was impressive but a bit baffling. The freight charges for hauling all of this furniture up the mountain would have been astronomical, but I doubted there were this many antiques in the whole basin. It was hard to believe that she’d accumulated this much by going on a massive antique hunting binge once she got here.
I wondered how Richie and Dylan had found anything of value in all this clutter, and whether any of the pieces I was dismissing with barely a glance were actually valuable. Just when I was about to give up the whole visit as a waste of time, I came across a nearly hidden selection of teacups and saucers that caught my interest. I didn’t think they were worth much, and the price tags stuck to the bottom of the saucers confirmed my suspicions, but they struck a chord with me, and I imagined the cup with the lavender roses filled with purple hard candies and bound up with cellophane and a bow made from antique-looking ribbon.
It was the first time since I took over Divinity that an artistic design had sprung into my mind, fully formed, and my heart beat a little faster in response. I spent the next several minutes looking through every cup and saucer and picking five of my favorites. Five should be enough to test the idea without spending a lot of money.
Carefully, I stacked the saucers together and picked up three of the cups by hooking my fingers through their handles. As I reached to pick up the other two with my free hand, I heard footsteps behind me. I turned to see Marshall come through the door of what I thought must once have been the kitchen.
He smiled when he saw me, and I was struck again by how good-looking he’d become since we were kids. “Ginger told me you were back here. I didn’t know you liked antiques.”
“I don’t know much about them,” I admitted, “but I’d heard good things about the store and thought I’d check it out. Why didn’t you tell me Ginger was back in town?”
“I didn’t realize you knew her; she’s so much younger than we are.”
I made a face at him. “We’re not
that
old. I was an aide for her Girl Scout troop for a couple of years. I would have come by to see her weeks ago if I’d known she was back.”
Marshall bowed slightly at the waist, a teasing light in his eyes. “My humble apologies. I won’t make the same mistake again.”
I laughed and picked up the last two cups. “It’s no big deal. I was just surprised to see her when I came through the door. She has quite a store here.”
“Doesn’t she?” Marshall stepped in front of me and shifted a chair to make it easier for me to get past it. “And it’s quite a success so far. People seem to love it.”
“I’m happy for her,” I said, and I honestly meant it. The place might make
me
feel as if the walls were closing in, but I still wished her well. “You’re both doing well, aren’t you? Gigi seems to be getting more popular all the time.
He laughed softly and shifted another chair out of my way. “It’s amazing, huh? Who would have thought the Ames kids would make good like this?”
I stopped walking and studied his face. “What do you mean by that?”
“Oh come on, Abby. I know what a geek I was in school, and Ginger wasn’t exactly the homecoming queen. We both struggled. I’m just saying, I think it’s kind of funny how the world changes.” He started walking again slowly, and I moved with him. “I mean, look at somebody like Kerry Hendrix for example. He was king of the world while he was in high school. Captain of the football team. President of the senior class. Everybody loved him. Girls couldn’t keep their hands off him. Now look at him. He’s working at the bowling alley and coaching Youth League basketball. How the mighty have fallen.”
“I don’t remember Kerry Hendrix in school,” I admitted.
“He was in Ginger’s class,” Marshall explained. “She had a killer crush on him, but he didn’t really give her the time of day. You know. Typical high school crap. You were gone by the time they got to high school, but the whole town made a big deal out of him back in those days.”
Suspicion zapped me again. Everything I’d been hearing about Kerry explained his arrogance, but Marshall seemed oddly emotional about Ginger’s childhood. “Well, I’m sorry for Ginger, but she’s obviously survived and thrived, so she doesn’t appear to have suffered.”
Marshall laughed, and the moment was gone. “You’re right. Oh, man, listen to me. I haven’t even thought about that stuff in years. It must have been talking about him at your place yesterday that brought it all back again.”
“In that case,” I said with a small grin, “I offer
my
most humble apologies.” We reached the front of the store, and I put the cups and saucers on the counter. “So you’re not friendly with Kerry these days?”
“If I were, would I have told you to watch out for him?”
I shook my head and laughed. “No, I guess not,” I said. “What about Ginger?”
“Are you kidding?”
“Silly question, I guess.” I stretched out my hand to ring the bell that would let Ginger know I was ready.
Marshall put his hand over mine and said, “Before you do that, I need to ask you a question.”
With Karen’s warning ringing in my ears, I drew my hand away slowly. “What?”
“Have dinner with me.”
“Dinner?”
“Yeah. It’s a meal, generally eaten in the evening. I thought it might be nice to eat one together.”
Even with Karen’s prediction, Marshall’s invitation stunned me. Words jammed up in my throat, and it took me a minute to get any of them out of my mouth. “That’s really nice of you, and I appreciate the invitation, but I can’t. I’m . . . seeing someone.”
Marshall’s smile inched a little wider. “I know all about the guy you’re seeing, Abby. I know he doesn’t appreciate you, and I know he doesn’t spend nearly enough time with you.”
“I know it probably looks that way from the outside, but you really can’t tell what’s going on between two people from outward appearances. Jawarski and I are both content with our . . . with the way things are. Really, Marshall, I’m flattered, but I really don’t think it’s a good idea.”
He studied my expression for a long time, then shrugged and worked up a smile. From a distance, the smile might have been convincing. Close up, it definitely lost the battle. Maybe because I could see the embarrassment in his eyes. There was something else in his expression, too. I just couldn’t put my finger on it.
“Well, you can’t blame a guy for trying, I guess.” He glanced over his shoulder, ran a quick look over his watch, and backed a step or two away. “Listen, I’ve gotta—I need to get back to the restaurant.”
“Oh. Sure,” I said with a smile. “Business is always first, right?” I tried again to figure out what that emotion was in the back of his eyes, but again it eluded me. Probably nothing, I told myself firmly. I’d hate to see what would be in
my
eyes right after someone turned me down for a date. “Listen, Marshall, just because we can’t go out, that doesn’t mean we can’t be friends.”
“Right. Friends. That’s good. It’s cool.” He stepped backwards again and the cat, which must have been hiding under a chair, let out a yowl of pain. A flush rushed into Marshall’s face, and he turned away quickly. “I’ll see you around, okay?”
“Absolutely.” I kept smiling until he shut the door behind him, then let out a breath and closed my eyes. I told myself that he’d taken the rejection well, but I couldn’t stop thinking about that look on his face and wondering just what it was I’d missed.
Chapter 26
My conversation with Marshall convinced me that
I couldn’t put off talking to Jawarski any longer. Not only did I want to find out if knowing Lou Hobbs’s name had unearthed any new information, but I had a sudden, intense need to make sure he and I
were
as comfortable with our . . . whatever it was . . . as I’d told Marshall we were.
I put the box holding the cups and saucers in the hatch and stuffed an old sweater and my emergency kit around it to keep the box from sliding. Then, loading Max into the backseat, I turned the Jetta toward town again.
It was mid-afternoon by the time I got there, and the parking lot the police department shared with other city offices was packed. I drove up and down several rows before I found a spot closer to the library than the police station. The weather was mild, but I had no idea how long this conversation would take, and I didn’t want to leave Max cooped up in the car. Hooking him to the chain again, I found a spot where he could lie in the shade or bask in the sun, depending on his mood, then pushed through the glass doors of the white brick building that housed Paradise’s finest.
Since Jawarski and I had started spending more time together I’d become, if not a regular fixture around here, at least not an unexpected one. I waved at the women working dispatch, signed in with the officer working the front desk, and climbed the stairs to the second floor.
The detective division is all the way at the back of the building, down a long, brightly lit corridor that stretched from one end of the building to another. That’s why I had no trouble seeing the blonde with the killer body standing just outside Jawarski’s office. I didn’t have any trouble seeing Jawarski either, for that matter. He lounged in the doorway wearing a broad, appreciative smile as he listened to what the blonde was saying.
I’m sure there were at least half a dozen explanations for what I was seeing, every one of them legitimate and non-threatening. I skipped over every one of them and went straight back in time to the night I walked into the bedroom I shared with my then-husband and discovered him on the floor with the reason my marriage had been falling apart.
I stopped halfway down the hall, wanting to turn around and get out of there before Jawarski noticed me, but unable to move. I was rooted to the spot, staring at the very thing I didn’t want to see with the horrid fascination of someone who’s just witnessed an accident.
After what seemed like a very long time, Jawarski looked away from the blonde and noticed me. He said something to her and waved me closer. “Hey there,” he said as the woman turned and walked away. “What are you doing here?”
Angry with myself for my reaction, I moved into his cluttered office, but I couldn’t get out the words I’d come to say. Instead of asking him to grab some dinner at my favorite Thai restaurant, I heard myself say, “I wondered if the information I gave you earlier was of any use.”
His expression closed down, just as I’d known it would, but right then it was easier to deal with him as a cop than as the man I cared way too much about. “You came about the murder?” he asked, his voice stone cold.
I nodded once and sat in one of the chairs in front of his desk. “Did the name help you? Could you find anything on either Arthur or Lou Hobbs?”
Jawarski dropped heavily into his chair, but the glare I expected didn’t appear. Instead, he smiled as if he’d just won the lottery. “Not yet, but we’re still pursuing a few angles, trying to find out if he has any other aliases.”
“Do you know where he was staying while he was here in town?”
“If I did, is there a reason I should tell you?”
The question stung, but I wasn’t sure whether I resented it because of the blonde, because of Marshall, or just because Jawarski was being an ass. “You should tell me,” I snapped, “because I may have some information that I can share with you.”
“Really? And what would that be?”
“I have a phone number that Elena Whitehorse from Big Horn Realty used to reach him when she set up appointments for him with Quentin Ingersol.” I’d copied the number onto a piece of scratch paper, and I pulled that out of my pocket now and dropped it on Jawarski’s desk. “If you don’t already know where he was staying, maybe that will help.”
He picked up the note and studied it for a long moment. “How’d you get this?”
“That doesn’t really matter, does it? What matters is that Quentin Ingersol knew Hobbs, but he’s lying about it for some reason.”
His gaze shifted from the paper he held to my face. “And you know that how?”
“I told you I talked to him earlier. He denied knowing Hobbs at all.”
Jawarski let out a sigh heavy with frustration. “Yeah. I’ve been meaning to talk to you about that.”
“Don’t bother giving me the lecture, because I already know it word for word, and you already know I’m not going to listen anyway.”
He shook his head and ran a hand over the bristle on his head. “What did this Elena Whitehorse tell you?”
“Just that Hobbs was in Quentin’s office more than once, and she called that number when she needed to make an appointment. And she said that she thinks Hobbs made Quentin nervous.”
“Have you tried calling the number yourself?”